Culture Magazine

A Blogger Walks the Plank

By Superconductor @ppelkonen

Met management fights to defend the Ring...from reporters.
by Paul Pelkonen

A Blogger Walks the Plank

Women and bloggers first. Lego® sculpture by Sir Dillon.

Like the whirring, clanking planks that make up the set of its new multi-million dollar production of Wagner's Ring, Metropolitan Opera's general manager Peter Gelb has been spinning in recent weeks. His object: to draw audiences to the company's new production of the Ring Cycle in  following a scathing critique from Alex Ross in the pages of the New Yorker. The latest victim of the hype is WQXR blogger Olivia Giovetti.
Ms. Giovetti is one of the writers of OperaVore, the classical music station's blog covering music, arts, culture and new music. (It's kind of like this blog without the humor and snappy color scheme.)
The Met general manager objected to Ms. Giovetti's recent post, Three Things We Learned From Peter Gelb Today. That post was then withdrawn from the WQXR website.
A story in today's New York Times by the always reputable Daniel J. Wakin indicates that the Metropolitan Opera general manager contacted radio station management and objected to Ms. Giovetti's artice. Mr. Gelb told the Times that he found the article "an awful and nasty piece, which in my opinion was totally unjustified."
The Metropolitan Opera is one of the minor sponsors of WQXR and allows its performances to be broadcast live on the Toll Brothers Radio Network. 
Ms. Giovetti's article was written as a response to Peter Gelb's Times interview with Anthony Tommasini earlier this year. She also quoted Mr. Ross' New Yorker critique of the Met's new production of Wagner's Ring cycle: "Pound for pound, ton for ton, it is the most witless and wasteful production in modern operatic history."
Here's a short excerpt from Ms. Giovetti's piece: "We came to the Met expecting to see Santa with a Norway Spruce unable to shield the mountain of presents buried underneath. Instead, we saw a silvered fake tree being sparsely filled by our parents in the middle of the night on December 24. Gelb’s faltering on semantics this week is the equivalent of those same parents saying 18 months later that perhaps it’s possible that St. Nick does not, in fact, exist."
Although the article has been removed from the WQXR site, a cached copy is currently being hosted on Parterre Box.
In other Ring-related news, attendees at last night's performance of the Ring who commented on Parterre Box's message boards commented that the famous mechanical contraption malfunctioned during Act II of last night's Siegfried, with one plank stubbornly refusing to change positions during the forest scene. 


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